ENVY
by Victoria Alexander
Stiller, the busiest man in show business, delivers another unfunny
comedy. IMDB.com
lists seven Ben Stiller movies for 2004! In the future, all movies
will star Ben Stiller. The Stiller Juggernaut recognizes no boundaries.
Ben, have you thought about starring on Broadway in "The Producers"?
I know there is some singing involved, but that can't stop
you.
ENVY
must have been a good "pitch," but no one will be jealous
of this comedy. The emotion that comes to mind is "pity."
Tim
Dingman (Ben Stiller) and Nick Vanderpark (Jack Black) are best
friends, live across the street from each other, and work together
at a sandpaper factory. Dingman is a hard worker with two young
children. Vanderpark is also a family man but is a daydreamer who
thinks up a terrific invention: evaporating dog poop with a mysterious
spray. He asks Dingman for $2000 for a 50% partnership. Dingman
thinks the idea is ridiculous and declines to participate.
The
invention, Vapooprizer, is a fantastic success. Instead of bringing
in his best friend as a CEO or whatever, Vanderpark and his wife
spend all their time building a palace with a merry-go-round and
bowling alley directly where their old house once stood. In perfect
delusionary fashion, Natalie Vanderpark (Amy Poehler) decides to
run for Congress.
Vanderpark's
wife Debbie (Rachel Weisz) is understandably upset. When Vanderpark
shouts at his boss, he is fired. He meets the nutty J-Man (Christopher
Walken) who encourages him to disrupt Vanderpark's good fortune.
What
happened here? The setup is merely passable, but we go along with
it. The movie collapses because Dingman is really a nice guy. He
is not going to actually sabotage his goofy, happy-go-lucky friend.
The troublemaking is passed off to the J-Man. Now the movie is all
about the J-Man, what he wants, and how he will take advantage of
Dingman's envy. But the J-Man is not the star of the movie,
so we are left with an inadequate second act. Staying away from
DOWN AND OUT IN BEVERLY HILLS, J-Man only peripherally intrudes
on Dingman's family. Wouldn't it have been more fun
if the J-Man had become Vanderpark's houseguest? But this
would have meant a more textured screenplay instead of a fast paycheck
for the writer, director, and stars.
No
matter how many faces Stiller makes, or contractual close-ups he
gets, it is Walken you want to see more of. Black, after his huge
THE SCHOOL OF ROCK success, tries not to repeat himself, so what
can he do with this dumb part? Leaving director Barry Levinson to
hone an interesting character was a mistake.
ENVY
DreamWorks
DreamWorks Pictures and Columbia Pictures present in association
with Castle Rock Entertainment a Baltimore/Spring Creek Pictures
production
A Barry Levinson film
Credits:
Director: Barry Levinson
Producers: Barry Levinson, Paula Weinstein
Screenwriter: Steve Adams
Executive producer: Mary McLaglen
Director of photography: Tim Maurice-Jones
Production designer: Victor Kempster
Editors: Stu Linder, Blair Daily
Costume designer: Gloria Gresham
Composer: Mark Mothersbaugh
Cast:
Tim Dingman: Ben Stiller
Nick Vanderpark: Jack Black
Debbie Dingman: Rachel Weisz
Natalie Vanderpark: Amy Poehler
J-Man: Christopher Walken
Running
time -- 99 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13
by
Victoria Alexander - FilmsInReview.com
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